Monday, 24 December 2018

Happy Christmas or Lo Saturnalia!

'Lo Saturnalia' - Christmas Time celebrations Roman style

It's that time of year yet again when hopefully we can look forward to taking time off and relaxing with the people who make life worth living, whilst having a bit of fun, over-eating and drinking and generally wishing peace and goodwill to our fellows.

With JJ's Wargames very much into a Roman theme at present I thought I would extend my seasonal best wishes to all my readers in a typically Roman style with the traditional celebrations for Saturnalia or to the god of agriculture, Saturn, when our Roman forebears would have taken a week off between the 17th and 23rd of December to let their hair down and have a good time and celebrate the end of seed planting in the autumn and looking forward to a healthy crop in the new year.

My favourite quote for this seasonal partying comes from the 2nd century Greek poet Lucien who declared that;

"Serious is barred and no business allowed at Saturnalia but singing naked is encouraged"

Well the temperature here in Britannia might not be encouraging towards the latter but in the spirit of the former I will be signing off over the Xmas holiday before returning with a report on some post Xmas day wargaming followed by my traditional pre-New Year look-back at 2018 and projecting the plan for an exciting 2019, thus celebrating the end of this years 'seed sowing' and looking forward to a 'healthy crop' of new games and posts to bring in for next year.



Thus I wish you all a very Happy Christmas and a Peacefully Prosperous New Year or indeed Lo Saturnalia.

Friday, 21 December 2018

Sarmatian Cataphracts


With focus in recent weeks very much on getting phase two of the terrain construction plan completed before Xmas I was also conscious that I needed to press on with phase two of the Romano-Dacian figure collection, following recent projects getting US cavalry, Plains Indians and Seven Years War British figures painted in time for other commitments.

So the new list of units is now up on my painting desk which I look forward to crossing off as each unit gets done - I know it's just my system and it's how my brain likes to work by rewarding itself by seeing an ever reducing list each time I sit down to paint!


As well as another six Dacian warbands to be added to the six already done I need to get the first units of the very potent Sarmatian force set to compliment them and add that threat to my Roman forces.


That threat doesn't get much more potent that Sarmatian Cataphracts, backed up by horse archers and with six units of each to be built going forward and with a particular game in mind that requires at least two units of this formidable heavy cavalry I thought I would get started this side of the Xmas break, thus ending my 2018 on a nice painting high.

These cataphracts are from the Warlord range and very nice figures they are indeed with a little work required in their construction with hands to be drilled out for the various weapons and separate sword, bow and quivers to be affixed to torsos designed to be mounted on the legs and waist section of the figure already cast onto the horse.


As in previous unit posts I thought it would be interesting to look at the capabilities of this one in 'Augustus to Aurelian' (AtoA) designed very much for shock particularly against Roman units already softened up by the horse archers they will operate with.

The first stat card below illustrates a basic cataphract unit as a small unit of eight figures, approximately equivalent to just two-hundred men, but heavily armed and armoured with the Kontos shown at the bottom of the card as a special characteristic.


Thus this unit would normally roll two d10 when firing or in combat, using column three for combat and column two for shooting on the Combat/Shooting table seen below, cross referenced against the armour class of the target.

The 'Kontos' characteristic grants the unit an additional d10 in the first round of combat and your typical Legionary or Auxiliary cohort would count as medium armour with the occasional veteran or Praetorian cohort gaining heavy armour protection.


Thus we can see that a casualty will be caused for each score of 4 or less or 3 or less on a d10 for combat and shooting respectively before any column shifts are made to reflect the circumstances of the particular combat.

The Combat and Shooting Table for 'Augustus to Aurelian'

The morale rating of 7 is reasonably robust with a score on 2d6 plus or minus factors needed to be rolled less than to act as ordered.

The size of the unit means it is less able to sustain casualties and this is reflected in a rating of 2 meaning the unit will become 'shaken' once it has suffered two casualties or more.


As can be seen from the explanation above the Noble Cataphracts hit harder and resist casualties slightly better and this would be a similar profile if we made the basic cataphracts veterans or 'hardened' as they would be classified in AtoA.


Noble Cataphracts if similarly classed as 'hardened would increase their Combat Factor to a 5 making them a real threat on first contact with the additional d10 thrown in.


As well as packing a punch they are classed as heavily armoured or 'cataphract' as listed on the table, this meaning that your typical legionary cohort will be hitting in shooting and combat on the  '4' column needing '3' or less, before column shifts for circumstances, on 3d10 to knock one of these chaps out the saddle and auxilia tend to hit one less.

So these cataphracts with the heavy armour protection can equally take a punch which combined with the mobility that cavalry offer means that a Roman force has to treat these units with great respect whilst getting stuck into any Dacian warbands.


That said these units need to be used as designed, namely to take advantage of Roman units already discomforted by shooting casualties using their mobility to close on the enemy from the most advantageous position. The fact that they carry composite bows is also a great advantage to enable them to join in that softening up process with their accompanying horse archers.

Simply throwing these chaps in against steady Roman infantry may see them broken in short order if they suffer the slightest casualties, all be it that that is still a tough ask for the Romans.


However if used judiciously in combination with the Sarmatian horse archers who will shoot these chaps in and then followed up by the Sarmatian light cavalry designed to pursue broken enemy units my Sarmatians should be a force to be reckoned with on their own or in combination with Dacian warbands and skirmish troops.

In time I plan to have forty-eight of these chaps in the collection backed up by a similar number of horse archers and light spear armed cavalry and they can take to the field from the early Imperium right through to the wars of Marcus Arelius and his Marcomannic Wars.

Terrain Build Update - The Table is Back with New Terrain!


If you have been following the blog over recent weeks you will have seen a few posts covering work on the new terrain collection and room adjustments which are linked by the fact that my room needed first to be rearranged to accommodate a new collection of larger scale figures and terrain and then the terrain needed to be created.

Of course as I tend to work on projects in planned phases, the first phase of the terrain collection was started with the building of my MDF Roman buildings and marching fort earlier in the year.

Roman Marching Camp Update
There's no place like Rome


There really wasn't much point in going any further with that first phase as I needed to clear out my loft to create new storage space before hand and that work had to wait until the summer had passed with cooler weather allowing work in the loft to be done comfortably.

Thus I have contented myself by adding to the figure collection in the meantime which has seen sizable groups of units added to both the Roman and Dacian collection.


In September I was able to get on with the loft rearrangements which then allowed me to make changes to the wargames room which even now are only partially complete, but with enough progress to allow the start of the second phase of terrain building.

As regular followers of the blog will know I like to work towards running games even with a partial collection and so the terrain, just like the figures has been constructed in that manner.


As mentioned the marching fort was completed in the early part of this year, but I didn't want to picture it until I had completed the set of tents that were always intended to occupy part of the interior.

Those tents were included in the second phase build and here they are with the fort and a few figures to give an impression of it when I finally get to deploy it in a planned game.

This style of fort is perhaps more formidable than a simple marching emplacement in that I wanted to create a structure that was not permanent but that had been further improved to act as a staging post that would have no doubt guarded a major supply route in one of Trajan's campaigns.

In time I will construct some Scorpio bolt throwers together with crew to occupy those towers together with additional individual auxiliary spearmen that will be used along the stockade.


The second phase also included my watch-tower recently acquired from Grand Manner and now sealed and finished ready for its table-top debut alongside the beacon and the small hillock I put together to mount it on.






Finally I mentioned that I picked up a second set of river sections from Products for Wargamers at this year's Warfare in Reading and that I intended to finish them off to my own preferences, so once the trees and tower were finished I completed phase two by getting my river sections done.



As we go forward I have plans to build some purpose built sections to include a ford or two and some bridge crossing points but a simple river is all I needed for the time being and I think they work really well on my table.



Did I mention the table? Well since showing off my new cloth from Tiny Wargames that has been waiting on table to greet the other terrain items I thought I would set the whole thing up ready for the first game featuring the new collection and recreating the 'Hold the Pass' scenario and table set up from Warlord Games' 'Romes Dacian Wars' Hail Caesar companion book, but first I thought I would show you the fixed up river sections out on the table.



And finally the new look table with the fruits of my terrain building work for this year.

I am really excited about next year as with this foundation I can add to the figure collection to stage bigger and different games and gradually add more to the terrain to produce even more interesting tables.


I'm really pleased with the look of the tree and scatter terrain with the the colours working really well with the new mat.

Tom and I have plans to start work on a set of modular hill sections that I will be able to place along the edges of the table to add a variety of height and to bring together to form complete low hills in the centre of the table.





The next time I put up pictures of this table set up I hope to show the units out on it from the first game.


Next up, the Sarmatian Cataphracts are done.

Thursday, 20 December 2018

Mr Steve & JJ's Three Castles Walk, Part Three - Caerwent (Venta Silurum)

Artists impression of the tribal capital of the Silures and Veterans town of Venta Siluram modern day Caerwent as it may have looked in the mid-fourth century and pictured from the east gate.

This final post is the third one in a series covering a walk Mr Steve and I did back in sunny September this year which looked at the three marcher castles, White Skenfrith and Grosmont and the surrounding welsh boderlands, Raglan Castle and finally Caerwent, the market town of the Silures established in the 1st century AD.

If you would like to pick up the post covering parts one and two you can follow the links below:

Additionally this post handily follows on from a two part post looking at Carolyn's and my visit to Caerleon and the base of II Legion Augusta, together with our visit to the National Roman Legion Museum back in 2016.

Likewise the links covering that visit can be found below:

Ever since that visit back in 2016 I had been looking forward to walking around Caerwent, especially when Mr Steve sent me some pictures of the excellently preserved town wall he took during a previous visit.

That said I was still awe struck seeing the archaeology myself and I hope this post will do justice to what must be one of the best preserved town walls in the UK, if not in the former Empire, and encompassing a modern day village situated among the ruins of the former Roman one, with life continuing much as it did nearly two-thousand years previously.


As looked at in my previous post looking at Caerleon and the establishment of the Legionary fortress, this part of what is now South Wales saw a bitter struggle between the Roman invaders and the Silures, the local tribal group, who over a thirty year period put up stubborn resistance to the Roman presence inflicting stinging defeats on their forces and causing Emperor Vespasian to focus increasing efforts to finally put down the resistance and impose control.

Caerleon, like Chester and York would become a permanent base for one of the three Legions garrisoning the island providing vexhilations from II Augusta to patrol in the north of the island as well as on the continent but acting as the Legion's centre of operations and a base to oversee the occupation of a formerly troublesome part of Britannia.

As with other Roman bases, veteran legionaries often chose to settle in the area in which they served and in doing so added to the process of  'Romanisation' by entering into local civilian life often with a family started during their military service and with a significant pension to allow them to set themselves up as leaders within that population as well as providing a source of experienced military manpower should emergency require.

However, as we shall see at the conclusion to this post, Venta Silurum was a a 'civitas' rather than a 'colonia' and very much a town of and part of the Silures tribe, not simply a Roman colony established amid a conquered people.

An aerial picture of the former Silure tribal hillfort at Llanmelin Wood near Caerwent

Founded in 75 AD with the defeat and subjugation of the Silures, Venta Silurum became the market town of the Silures built close by to the former tribal hilltop fort at Llanmelin Wood.






So picking up from the previous post, Mr Steve and I had just enjoyed the morning checking out St Cadoc's village church, Grosmont Castle and Raglan Castle, all covered in the second post in this series, and so after a very pleasant and well earned pub lunch we headed off to our final destination of the two day expedition to look at the Roman ruins of Venta Siluram.

I have put together a map of the modern village illustrating the ruins that can be seen together with the church that holds other pieces of Roman archaeology discovered over the years and to which we headed last on our walk.

The blue arrows indicate our route and should help to orientate the reader as to where we were when the pictures were taken, as the map points referred to in the text are in the order we walked to them, not in a numerical one, focusing as we did in the better preserved southern wall.

The map illustrates the route (blue arrows) Mr Steve and I walked around the village with point markers to show important points pictured in this post

Map Point 2 - The West Gate
Parking our cars at Point 1, the village car park and information centre we headed off to start our walk at Point 2, the west gate as illustrated in the impression below.


The base of one of the gate towers can be seen at this end of the wall leading south away from the road and one gets an immediate impression of the size of the structure which will only be added to as you walk on to the southern corner.

View looking south along the west wall from the base of the gate tower

The base of the gate tower gives a vivid impression of the size of this structure and its likely appearance

Looking back towards the road along the west wall

The end of the western wall at its southern corner


On turning the south west corner of the wall you get a really amazing site of the south wall stretching ahead as far as the eye can see with a series of bases of the four towers jutting out from it and with the ground in front dropping away giving a hint of the original vallum or town wall ditch that would have fronted the whole construction.

The view along the southern wall from the western corner and the extent of this wall is very impressive

The base of the first of six projecting towers built on the southern wall

The size of the base of the tower shows a significant structure and easily capable of mounting a small artillery piece such as a Scorpio bolt launcher

A closer inspection of the wall construction illustrates an interesting herringbone pattern of laying the internal stones behind the facing stone work

This wall is really impressive in its size and solidity, illustrated by its standing up to the ravages of time itself

And still the wall progresses along the southern perimeter

An illustration of one of the southern wall towers and the double ditch that would have fronted it

One of the better preserved towers gives a great impression of the size and imposing nature of these defences

A culvert leading out from the town's sewerage system feeding waste water into the town ditch

Mr Steve stands in for an aggravated local tribesman, illustrating the height and solidity of the town defences

The culvert channelling waste water from out of the town

From the top of the southern wall one can see the protected land around the church covering up much of the remaining Roman archaeology of this amazing site 

The view out over the town of Venta Silurum from the southern wall looking west towards the hills beyond the valley

Map Point 3 - The South Gate
The entrance at the southern gate and ground covering the original Roman road

The south gate is marked by the track leading out through the gap in the wall which was most likely originally guarded by a tower gate similar to that illustrated for the west gate, except that both it and the north gate were single arches between the guard towers on either side.

Interestingly the Time Team program showed that the south and north gates were not directly opposite each other siting a Roman source suggesting that roads could be staggered in the layout of a town to reduce the effect of prevailing strong winds being channelled along them.

Ever onward it seems, the southern wall progresses from the south gate

The base of one of the two towers on this half of the south wall

Map Point 4 - Castle Mound
On reaching the south east corner of the wall another historical invader of the island has left their mark with a Norman motte built on the position and obviously taking advantage of the former Roman defences.

Ah the Normans, don't you just love them!

An impression of the Norman motte and bailey castle built on the south east corner of the Roman town wall.

Ignoring the vandalism of past centuries and the military needs of the Normans, the motte is still an impressive piece of military architecture


As covered in the Time Team program, high status building such as villas were seemingly built at the extremities of the enclosure and in the corners of the defences thus being furthest away from the hustle and bustle of the town centre with its shops and businesses and greater population.

In 1777 the gloriously decorated mosaic seen below was discovered here in the south east corner of the town.

A mosaic floor discovered in 1777 in a building in the south east corner of the town

Looking along the east wall from the motte on the south east corner

The name of the road gives a clue to the ancient builders of this particular route into the modern village via the former east gate

Map Point 6 - East Gate
At the east gate we decided to head back into the village and start our look at the building complexes that have been uncovered over previous years.

The east gate would have originally been guarded by a double arched gate between two towers similar to that illustrated for the west gate.

Investigation has discovered that the gates were not bonded into the wall which is thought to date from the third century and so they are thought to have been constructed earlier.

Opposite this gate, outside of the wall, a larger circular structure has been discovered, thought to have been a temple and you can see an impression of the building in the illustration of the town at the top of the post.



Looking along the east wall from the east gate

Map Point 9 - The Temple
From point 6 at the east gate we made or way along the main road into the village and arrived at point 9 which marks the position of the remains of a Romano-Celtic temple built around 330 AD but the precise deity is uncertain.





Taking a road to our right led us to point 8, the town forum and the remains of nearby shops.

The illustration below gives an impression of the basilica which would have been the most imposing building in the town with high internal columns along the central nave supporting its lofted roof and forming the airy meeting hall for deciding town business.

The dimensions of the building measure 260 feet by 182 feet and is thought to have stood at least 65 feet in height and at either end of the central hall are the tribunal chambers where town magistrates would have their offices to hear civil cases.

The illustration of the west gate at the top of the post shows the basilica of the forum towering over the rest of the town.


A ground plan of the forum showing the arrangement of the buildings around a large central piazza entered through an archway from the main street to the left. 

The forum basilica looking over the back wall of the tribunal chambers along the nave with the north and south aisles either side of what would have been a row of columns supporting the high central roof



The guttering marks the frontage of rows of likely food shops and taverns and surrounding a large open piazza in front of the basilica


From the forum complex we headed off to point 12 to look at the remains of a courtyard house, illustrative of one of the higher status buildings built at the extremities of the town centre and close to the field where the Time Team discovered the villa complex together with its bath house.

Nicer more exclusive courtyard houses built on the outskirts of the town for the more affluent members of the community

These courtyard buildings were uncovered between 1981-84 and show a series of three buildings built on the same site with the earliest construction, a timber framed house built on a lower stone foundation, built around the late 2nd early-3rd century.

The foundations on view are of the more substantial 4th century farm with well appointed rooms built around two courtyards and with the two main residential rooms on the northern side fitted out with hypercaust floor heating, painted wall plaster and mosaic floors.

Ground plan of the 4th century farm complex at point 12

A view of the foundations surrounding the two (grass covered) courtyards from the south side looking north as per the ground plan above


From the courtyard farm we then went to points 11 and 10 with the former being part of a large three wing, courtyard house with painted plaster walls, hypercaust and mosaic floors and the latter consisting of shops, workshops and blacksmiths buildings.

These buildings were uncovered during excavations between 1947-55 and the large house revealed a series of reception rooms, dining room and servants quarters together with the mosaic seen below with fish motifs at each quarter now covered back up.

A 1958 illustration of the fourth century three wing courtyard house which is now thought to have been a single story building rather than the two stories as shown


An illustration of the mosaic floor discovered in the courtyard house and now left in place but covered up

The covered mosaic floor in the courtyard house area


From the courtyard house this row of buildings extends into a series of commercial premises that appear to have been developed and subdivided over a period of time from 150 AD to about 350 AD producing a rather complex series of wall foundations.

The ground plan illustrating the development of this rather complex site of commercial buildings over two hundred years

It is thought that two workshops were joined into one with one of these shown to be a blacksmiths workshop.

Looking from the courtyard house to the foundations of the commercial buildings leading out to the main road coming in from the west gate




After musing over the confusing series of walls that marked the commercial buildings we then decided to conclude our visit to Caerwent with a look at the treasures held in the village church, just across the main road.

The Church of St Stephen and St Tathan holds some really interesting Roman finds made in the village over the years, plus I find it always fascinating to explore the local history retained in the monuments and memorials that churches contain, that often links the local to the national history.

The Paulinus Stone

The Paulinus Stone is a really important find and a very interesting exhibit to be seen in the entrance to the church and indicative of the town dignitaries of a conquered tribe recognising the importance of cultivating a strong relationship with a patron to represent the town in the highest circles in Rome and the greater empire, as well as illustrating the joint role of military and civil administration for a Roman governor.


The stone was originally the base to a statue and the inscription was originally twelve lines but both the statue and the first line have been lost. It reads:

"(To Tiberius Claudius) Paulinus, (once) commander of the Second Augusta Legion, (next) proconsul of the province of Gallia Narbonensis, (now) imperial governor of the province of Lugdunensis; by decree of the council of the community of the state of the Silures."


Tiberius Claudius Paulinus was the legate of the II Augusta Legion at Caerleon during the reign of Caracalla 211-17. In 220 AD after serving in Gaul, he became governor of Britannia Inferior, the more northerly of the two provinces into which Britain had been divided at the beginning of the third century.

Before he became governor he performed some helpful act to the Silures, for which they honoured him by erecting a statue. In addition the inscription tells us that the Silures tribe were administered by a ruling council which could pass decrees, since the act of raising the statue was on behalf of the tribe of the Silures and not just the town of Venta, thus showing that a Roman civitas, for native people, should be seen as an area of territory with a town at its centre, rather than a town for Roman citizens with territory around it as a colonia would have been.

The stone was found in Caerwent in 1903 and had been reused as part of a post-Roman construction of heavy stone blocks in the centre of the village.

Next to the Paulinus stone was an altar stone excavated from the site of a house in Caerwent. The inscription reads:

"To the god Mars Ocelus, Aelius Augustinius, optio willingly and deservedly, fulfilled his vow"

Optio Aelius Augustinius was probably based at nearby Caerleon. Mars Ocelus was a particularly British if not a Silurian deity, indicative of the common fusion of beliefs which often occurred when native deities could be identified with their Roman equivalents.

These altar stones are quite common across the empire and I have now seen quite a few on my own travels and the typical small hollow on the top where an offering could have been placed or a sacrificial fire contained could be seen.


What was I saying about local history linking into national, and that was what caught my eye with this particular memorial seen below to Captain John Cropper, Royal Army Medical Corps drowned when H.M.H.S. Britannic was torpedoed or lost to a mine of Kea in the Agean Sea in 1916.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/HMHS_Britannic

His Majesty's Hospital Ship Britannic pictured in 1916
The Britannic was the third ship and sister ship to the famous White Star Olympic Class liner, Titanic and, having been the last ship in that class to be built just before the First World War, incorporated many of the design modifications that resulted from the inquest into the loss of the Titanic in 1912.

Sadly for this class of unlucky ships and the poor souls who were on them when stricken, they remain the largest passenger ships on the seabed and the Britannic was the largest ship lost in the First World War.

Captain Cropper was particularly unfortunate in that of the 1065 people on board the Britannic when she foundered 1035 were rescued from lifeboats or the sea.




With the conclusion of our visit to St Stephen's and St Tathan I said goodbye to Mr Steve on this our second expedition with plans to look at some other interesting places to walk around and visit in 2019.

Thank you to everyone who has commented here and on other forums about how much they have enjoyed these kind of posts and I plan to continue having them as a major part of the blog, linking in as they do with the history underpinning the hobby as well as illustrating some of the great places to visit here in the UK.

Next up, a final look at my latest work on the second phase of terrain building and table preparations for forthcoming Romano-Dacian games and not forgetting my first unit of my Sarmatian cavalry division that can really spoil any Roman Saturnalia celebration.